The Native Born; or, the Rajah's People - BestLightNovel.com
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"Another twenty minutes."
"Another twenty minutes!" she repeated thoughtfully. "That is quite a long time, isn't it?"
He flicked his whip across the horse's ears.
"Yes, and I'm glad," he said. "Otherwise, I shouldn't have seen much of you. I happen to know that I am taking in Miss Caruthers to dinner, and dinner takes up most of the evening at these functions."
"You are taking in Lois Caruthers!" she said, laughing. "I know of some one who will be annoyed."
"Stafford, you mean?"
"And Lois herself."
He joined in her amus.e.m.e.nt.
"Yes, I suppose so."
"You have a good-natured hostess. I dare say the arrangement could be altered if you wished it."
"But I don't. They happen to be _my_ arrangements, you see."
"Oh!" she e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed, somewhat taken back.
"On my left there will be Mrs. James, who, as you perhaps know, is stone deaf," he went on calmly. "On Miss Caruthers' right will be Mr. James, who from long custom never opens his mouth except to put something into it.
Stafford will be right at the other end of the table."
"You are malicious," she said.
"Not a bit. I only go hard for what I want, that's all." He chuckled to himself and then went on: "I've confided to you my subtle underground plans--why, goodness knows. I'm not usually of a confiding nature. But really, Miss Cary, I feel as though I had known you all my life."
"We have already plotted together," she said. "Possibly that forms some sort of link between us."
He glanced down at her, and this time, as she did not return his gaze, he was free to study her calm, undisturbed profile.
"By Jove!" he exclaimed, half under his breath, "I don't blame the young fool for being taken in."
Her brows contracted sharply.
"Thank you. I suppose that is a compliment."
"It is meant for one. By the way, are you really sure of your success?"
"Perfectly sure."
"That's a good thing. We shall have the laugh over old Stafford and his grandmother's ideas if it comes off. All I fear is that the youth's impressionable mind may lose its impressions as quickly as it receives them."
"I don't think so. He did not seem that sort."
"Besides," added Travers, with a sudden drawl, "your face is not one that a man forgets easily, Miss Cary."
She stirred very slightly in her seat. It was the instinctive movement of a woman bracing herself secretly for a coming shock.
"Really?"
"Yes, really. That was what I meant to tell you the other day, but there was no fitting opportunity. I recognized you at once."
"And I you," she returned.
He whistled.
"So we recognized each other and didn't recognize each other. Rather a queer thing, eh?"
Again there was that scarcely noticeable stiffening of her whole body.
"I see nothing queer about it. We were both taken aback, and after the first shock we realized that to acknowledge a previous meeting was not to either of our advantages. You were ashamed; and I--well, you can guess my reasons."
"By Jove! You know, you really are plucky!" he burst out, with genuine admiration.
"Thank you. You have intimated that to me already, and, as a matter of fact, there is no question of pluck. I'm taking the bull by the horns because I must. Mr. Travers, I can't live in the same place with you and not know if you are going to explode the mine under our feet or not. I may have nerve, but I haven't got nerve enough for that."
"I see. You want to know whether I am going to gossip or hold my tongue.
Is that it?"
"Yes, that's it."
"Suppose I gossip?"
"I see no reason why you should be our enemy, so I don't mind admitting to you that it would spoil our plans."
"What may they be?"
"Firstly, to get clear of everything that has happened. We've tried to do that in different places all over Europe, without success. Something or somebody has always cropped up and driven us away. It was just as though every one least concerned in the matter had made up their minds to track us down. At last mother thought of India, and of Marut in particular. My father held a small post somewhere about here before we left for England, and we make out that it is tender a.s.sociations and all that sort of thing.
Of course, we might be found out any day, but perhaps people are not so curious out here, and it gives us a rest."
"Might I ask why you take all this trouble?"
"I was going to tell you. Because my mother wants what she calls position--she wants to mix with the best. We couldn't do that in England, for the reasons I have given you. As for me--I fulfil my destiny. I am seeking a suitable husband."
He drew in his breath in something that was not unlike a gasp.
"My dear Miss Cary, do you know what the world--particularly the woman world--would call you?"
"_Does_ call me, you mean? Of course. An adventuress."
"To be quite frank, you've hit it. But I don't. I call you a jolly extraordinary and clever woman."
"Please don't pay me compliments," she said coldly. "My cleverness--if I have any--is not more than that of any hunted animal who seeks cover where best he can. As to my being extraordinary, I do not see that you have any reason to call me so. You might as well say that it is extraordinary when a weed springs up where a weed has been sown--"
"Or a flower," he interposed suavely.